Gilead: A Novel
by Marilynne Robinson
The Minister's Tale
A review by Mona Simpson
Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping is one of the ten best novels of the
past century. In its haunting voice and its inevitable movement, both fabular
and precise, it is a nearly perfect work, still as singular and eerie today as
when it was published, in 1980. Yet many serious readers have never heard of Housekeeping.
Robinson is absent from lists of the living greats. A Nexis search for her name
yields only fourteen hits from 2003. Her relative obscurity most likely results
from the fact that Housekeeping was for a quarter of a century an only
child. Now Robinson has written a second novel. But because it has been so long
in coming, it is hard to treat Gilead as simply that.
I avoided Housekeeping for the first few years of its life because I
was put off by the title, which to me suggested vacuuming and a middle-aged
woman's discontents. (In l980 I was a year out of college. Vacuuming? I felt
generations past those old complaints.) But in fact Housekeeping is a
story of the end of housekeeping, in the most literal sense of that compound
word.
The house in question stands in Fingerbone, a town in the remote Northwest.
The novel tells a simple story. A woman borrows a car, drives her two small
girls to her mother's house, and then drives herself into a lake. (Her husband
appears only in flashback; the children once saw their mother tear an unopened
letter from him into four pieces and drop them into the trash, saying, "It's
best.") The orphans, Ruth and Lucille, are cared for first by their grandmother,
in the house her late husband built, then by their maiden great-aunts from Spokane,
who are frightened both of children and of the harsh weather in Fingerbone,
and finally by another aunt, Sylvie, an itinerant who had been riding the rails.
The right age, their mother's sister, Sylvie is the one the girls set their
hearts on, even as they understand that she is, as people used to say, not all
there.
When their mother drives the car into the lake, both Ruth and Lucille are under
seven. Their kind, capable grandmother -- a baker of pies, a braider of hair -- is
old. We know, as the girls do, that she will die before they're grown. The great-aunts
are miserable from their first night in Fingerbone, and their dialogues, duets
of perfect agreement, provide a comic interlude. We hear these ordinarily decent
women talk themselves into leaving their nieces with a woman who would generally
elicit their strongest disapproval.
So when Lily said, with a glance at Nona, "What a lovely dress," it was
as if to say, "She seems rather sane! She seems rather normal!" And when Nona
said, "You look very well," it was as if to say, "Perhaps she'll do! Perhaps
she can stay and we can go!"
Once Sylvie arrives, though, the gentle comedy leaves the book forever. Slowly
life unmolds from its usual forms, and the patterns of small-town propriety
loosen. At the table where their grandmother once served fresh-baked bread and
tart jelly, they now sit in the dark, Sylvie favoring canned sardines, which
she eats with her fingers. The outside grows into the house. Nests and dry leaves
round the corners of rooms. Eventually the girls stop going to school. The town
deliberates about whether and when and how to take them away.
"Clearly our aunt was not a stable person," Ruth, the narrator, says,
with characteristic understatement. Hers is a slim voice -- sad, occasionally
wondrous, and marked by a scrupulous determination to be fair. The elder of
the two girls, she is inclined to forgiveness and praise. Ruth's voice is both
plain and extraordinary. It is what one remembers years after reading her story.
Here is Ruth's description of her grandmother's belief:
She conceived of life as a road down which one traveled, an easy enough road
through a broad country, and that one's destination was there from the very
beginning, a measured distance away, standing in the ordinary light like some
plain house where one went in and was greeted by respectable people and was
shown to a room where everything one had ever lost or put aside was gathered
together, waiting. She accepted the idea that at some time she and my grandfather
would meet and take up their lives again, without the worry of money, in a
milder climate. She hoped that he would somehow have acquired a little more
stability and common sense.
This composition is a child's primitive miniature of predestination, containing
not a single idea more than a young girl would have about theology.
Housekeeping's narrative unfolds chronologically. Its structure is elegantly
classic, as the tension between the ragged family triumvirate and the conventional
town shifts inward to a conflict between the two sisters, who have equal and
opposing loyalties -- one to their dead relatives and the other to the promise
of life, with its gaudy hopes of dresses, dances, and romance.
Not long after it was published, Housekeeping was deemed a classic.
One can imagine the small frenzy in the author's life: urgent calls from publishers,
magazine editors, agents. In the terms of literary novels, Housekeeping
has thrived -- nearly 400,000 copies sold, even a movie. But no second novel
followed, after five years, ten years, fifteen, and one imagines Robinson's
telephone falling silent in Iowa City, where she teaches at the Writers' Workshop.
The book, still read and respected, found its place in that category of cherished
marvels that happen only once in a lifetime, like certain comets.
Now Robinson's second novel has appeared. I approached it with trepidation,
remembering a review years ago that derided early critics of Gabriel García
Márquez's The Autumn of the Patriarch with the canny accusation
that they wanted to be "back in Macondo," the fictional village of One Hundred
Years of Solitude. I knew before opening Gilead that I longed to
fall again under the sway of Housekeeping's narrator. But the two books
are related only in the odd way of siblings born years apart.
Gilead is the account of John Ames, a third-generation minister in Iowa.
(It is worth mentioning that Housekeeping is punctuated with religious
references. The girls' grandfather was a "silent Methodist"; spring is described
as "the resurrection of the ordinary." And Ruth's location at the close of the
book is unclear: we don't know whether she is still speaking to us from this
world.) Over the years Ames has written thousands of sermons for his parish.
He's got a life's worth in the attic. Now, at seventy-six, he tries to calculate
their value.
Say, fifty sermons a year for forty-five years, not counting funerals and
so on, of which there have been a great many ... Say three hundred pages
make a volume. Then I've written two hundred twenty-five books, which puts
me up there with Augustine and Calvin for quantity ... I wrote almost all
of it in the deepest hope and conviction ... Trying to say what was true
... It's humiliating to have written as much as Augustine, and then to
have to find a way to dispose of it.
Ames's end-of-life insecurities about his work are chilling, especially to
a writer. Much fiction chronicling stringent self-sacrifice for an artistic
ideal has judged that sacrifice a tragic mistake -- think of Casaubon's "Key
to All Mythologies," in Middlemarch, or John Marcher's wasted life in
Henry James's "The Beast in the Jungle."
Like Casaubon and Marcher, Ames for a long time lives alone, despite his community's
best efforts. He works on his sermons, sends for books in the mail, and consoles
himself with baseball. Then one day a woman walks into his parish, and he finds
himself, he tells us, "thinking day and night about a complete stranger,
a woman much too young, probably a married woman -- that was the first time
in my life I ever felt I could be snatched out of my character, my calling,
my reputation, as if they could just fall away like a dry husk."
Robinson deftly characterizes this young stranger with just a few snippets
of dialogue. The woman asks the besotted Ames to baptize her. "No one seen
to it for me when I was a child," she says. "I been feeling the lack
of it."
Ames's love story is a happy one, but because it is told in flashback, it never
becomes a source of suspense in the novel. By the time we learn that the old
minister once experimented with hair tonic, to impress the stranger, we already
know the outcome of this small vanity: the marriage is long settled and has
produced a son.
Gilead takes the form of Ames's journal entries, written for his child to read
when he is grown. The narrative roams and circles, as diaries do, and is largely
cerebral, with little forward imperative. In this sort of book all depends on
the quality of the contemplation and the charm of the voice. Fortunately, Ames's
is original and strong.
A fragile plot lands delicately on the characters midway through the book,
when the ne'er-do-well son of Ames's best friend returns to town. The black
sheep is the same age as Ames's wife, and the two strike up a friendship. Our
minister, entirely admirable thus far, becomes less the goody-goody as his jealousy
grows. (This turn of events echoes Middlemarch, when Casaubon -- another
old husband -- becomes jealous of his young cousin.) As he eavesdrops on the
pair, we, too, begin to wonder if his wife is falling in love with the reprobate.
Although the pulse of the novel quickens briefly, in the end Robinson remains
faithful to her true interest: her protagonist's moral development, even at
seventy-six. She is less concerned with whether -- in the real world of Gilead,
Iowa -- Ames did in fact have any budding adultery to worry about. Ames comes
to see his wife's life from a distance and to understand what he was able to
give her and what he wasn't.Finally, he almost wishes for another kind of love
to be waiting for her after his death. For readers especially interested in
moral ideas, this resolution will be satisfying. But for those who read to find
out what happens, or to have something actually happen, this purely internal
expansion may not be enough.
As in most stories of holy men, it's the less-than-holy that tends to grab
the reader's attention. A scrappy and perhaps shrewd editor might have told
Robinson to move her narrator's building hatred up a hundred pages, to provide
an Iago, to trust her plot and make more of it, perhaps to use Ames's suspicions
to frame the narrative. In fact, Gilead contains a gaggle of broken rules familiar
to any MFA student: too many flashbacks, not enough momentum, insufficient escape
from a single sensibility. Whereas a dire suspense -- the fate of orphans -- forms
a strong spine inside Housekeeping, the story here seems overlaid, a thin vein
on top of the book, not even covering its full span. It is as if Robinson has
lost the taste for plot.
Gilead is an almost otherworldly book. Its characters are, to a one, good people
trying to do right. Obviously a work of enormous integrity, it feels different
in kind from the work of writers who produce a book every couple of years, rushing
to meet alimony payments, one imagines, or wanting to renovate kitchens. One
senses none of the rub of greed informing the writing of the book -- but because
it lacks the mess of life poking up from the bottom, one is also left without
the urgency of fiction.
Still, there is much to admire in Gilead. It contains precise evocations
of a minister's daily life. The religious elements in Housekeeping were
somehow more ethereal for coming from a child's perspective. Ames's existence
is quite earthy, providing a sense of the frequent banality of holy life. He
complains about a "molded salad of orange gelatin with stuffed green olives
and shredded cabbage and anchovies that has dogged my ministerial life," and
finds that a certain bean dish looks "distinctly Presbyterian." He is frustrated
when two people laughing together stop as he approaches.
Gilead contains a lot of abstract theological rumination. The minister's
obsessions are Robinson's own, a sense we have less from Housekeeping's
elegant and elliptical religious references than from her book of essays, The
Death of Adam (1998). Ames takes a commonsense but fresh approach to the
varieties of religious experience. He begins one idea with the suggestion "If
you think how a thing we call a stone differs from a thing we call a dream ...
," offered to support the plausibility of the existence of God. The line could
easily have come from one of Robinson's essays.
Marilynne Robinson obviously can write an extraordinary novel. Gilead raises
the question of whether she really still wishes to. One hesitates to define
Gilead exactly as a novel. It is a beautiful book of ideas.
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